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medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture

'a former estate or village raised to urban and to episcopal status
precisely because of the cult'

Amasea survives to this day as a titular see in the Roman church.  I met the
late Archbishop James Carroll, Titular Archbishop of Amasea 1965-95 and
auxiliary in the archdiocese of Sydney - a long way from north central
Turkey! 

-----Original Message-----
From: medieval-religion - Scholarly discussions of medieval religious
culture [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of John Dillon
Sent: Tuesday, 17 February 2009 4:17 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [M-R] saints of the day 17. February

medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture

Today (17. February) is the feast day of:

1)  Theodore of Amasea (d. 306, supposedly).  The megalomartyr T., today's
best known saint of the Regno, is a martyr of today's Amasya in north
central Turkey, formerly Amaseia in Pontus (often latinized as 'Amasea'),
where by the 380s he had an active cult at a martyrion described by St.
Gregory of Nyssa in his panegyric on T. (BHG 386).  An English-language
translation of this text is here:
http://www.sage.edu/faculty/salomd/nyssa/theodore.html
The location of the early martyrion is disputed.  Since at least the time of
the emperor Anastasius (491-518) it was in the outlying community of
Euchaita (today's Avkat), a former estate or village raised to urban and to
episcopal status precisely because of the cult.  "Eastern" churches have
traditionally considered today to be T.'s _dies natalis_.  From Bede through
the Roman Martyrology of 1956, "western" martyrologies listed him on 9.
November.  Said to have been a soldier slain while still a young man, T. was
from at least the later fifth century onward widely known as a great
military saint.

Shortly after the ninth century T.'s legend bifurcated: in both "east" and
"west" he was treated both as Theodore the General (T. Stratelates or
Stratilates) and as Theodore the Recruit (T. Tiro), as the young Theodore's
appellation was now interpreted.  In the Byzantine world, at least, the two
Theodores were venerated by different classes: the general by officers and
the recruit by other ranks.  T. the General (a.k.a. T. of Heraclea) came to
have a different _dies natalis_, 7. February (in Byzantine synaxaries, 8.
February), and was listed as a saint of that day in the RM though its
version of 1956.  The new (2001) version of the RM returned the Roman Rite
to the early practice of considering T. as a single saint, martyred on 17.
February.

Among the many noteworthy "eastern" churches associated with T. are:
his church (Mar Thedros) in Bahdidat, Lebanon, with its impressive
twelfth(?)-century mural paintings:
http://tinyurl.com/bqs88r
his eleventh-century church at Athens (restored, 1840; note that the caption
in Greek, following the early modern and modern practice of joint veneration
of the Recruit and the General, calls it that of the Holy Theodores
[plural]):
http://www.caed.kent.edu//History/Byzantine/stheodore1.jpg
http://tinyurl.com/2cwct4
http://www.artandarchitecture.org.uk/images/conway/cbbad8b0.html
His late thirteenth-century church at Mistra (or Mystra; in Greek, Mystras):
http://www.mistraestates.gr/images2/Mistras4big.jpg
http://odysseus.culture.gr/java/image?foto_id=10101&size=l1
http://www.viaggiaresempre.it/01GreciaMistraSanTeodoro.jpg
The later fourteenth-century church of T. (Fyodor) Stratilates at Veliky
Novgorod (1360-1361, with later additions):
http://www.adm.nov.ru/cdrom/images/Churches/24.jpg

Portraits of the two T.'s (early fourteenth-century) by Manuel Panselinos in
the frescoes of the Protaton Church on Mt. Athos (first Tiro, then
Stratilates):
http://www.eikastikon.gr/xristianika/panselinos/57.jpg
http://www.eikastikon.gr/xristianika/panselinos/59.jpg

A late fifteenth-century icon of T. Stratilates in the Museum of History and
Architecture, Novgorod:
http://tinyurl.com/dbzgoq

More images of T.:
http://www.ucc.ie/milmart/imgthd.html

An early testimony to T.'s cult in the "west" is his perhaps sixth-century
church at Rome.  An English-language account of it is here:
http://romanchurches.wikia.com/wiki/San_Teodoro
Some views:
http://philrome1997.free.fr/htm500/det/002_0102.htm
http://p.vtourist.com/1302809-San_Teodoro_Rome-Rome.jpg
http://tinyurl.com/33c8ej

T. was the early patron saint of Venice.  Here he is on his column there
(perhaps wondering how he's going to get back at the winged lion on the next
column who replaced him in that role):
http://relay.arglist.com/photos/20050527-005.jpg

In the early thirteenth century remains said to be T.'s were brought from
Euchaita to Brindisi (BR) in Puglia, where they were placed in the partly
silver container shown here:
http://www.brindisiweb.com/storia/foto/arca1.jpg
This panel illustrates the translation by which T. became Brindisi's patron
saint:
http://www.brindisiweb.com/arcidiocesi/foto/arca_part.jpg
Note the two columns in the representation of Brindisi: unlike those at
Venice (largely a medieval foundation), these were holdovers from the Roman
city.  They have since suffered earthquake damage and one is now at Lecce
(LE) on the Salentine peninsula, where it supports that city's statue of
Sant'Oronzo in the piazza of the same name.
For a fuller description (Italian-language) of this container, go here:
http://www.brindisiweb.com/arcidiocesi/santi/santeodoro.htm
Whereas that _objet d'art_ is now in the archdiocesan museum at Brindisi,
T.'s putative remains are kept in a chapel dedicated to him in that city's
cathedral:
http://tinyurl.com/2wml68

Two unorthodox interpretations of "Tiro":
http://tinyurl.com/2mrwrd
and here:
http://www.saintbarbara.org/about/icons/theodore.cfm


2)  Flavian, bishop of Constantinople (d. 449 or 450).  Prior to his
elevation in 446 he had been scevophylax of that city's Great Church (Hagia
Sophia).  In 448 he presided over a synod that condemned the monophysite
theologian Eutyches.  The latter, influential at court, was soon
rehabilitated by the so-called Robber Council of Ephesus (449).  That body
deposed F., who died shortly afterward (his supporters said that this was
from mistreatment).  In 451 F. was rehabilitated by the Council of Chalcedon
and declared a martyr.  His name, at least, was known in the West from his
being the addressee of pope St. Leo I's doctrinal letter known as the _Tome_
of Leo, adopted at Chalcedon.

F. too is a saint of the Regno.  In the central and southern Marche and in
northern Abruzzo there has long been devotion to a saint named Flavianus,
chiefly venerated on 24. November.  Although that F. has been thought of as
a local martyr bishop, from at least the later Middle Ages onward he has
been identified at times as the bishop of Constantinople.  In 1001,
supposedly, remains believed to be those of F. of Constantinople arrived
miraculously at today's Giulianova (TE) in Abruzzo, a place that in the
early Middle Ages had been called Castrum Novum but prior to its refounding
in 1470 by Giulio Antonio Acquaviva, duke of Atri and count of Teramo and of
Conversano (d. 1481 fighting Turks from Otranto) was known as Castel San
Flaviano.

In 1478 these relics, which had been kept in the town's principal church,
were brought to the crypt of its as yet unfinished successor, now
Giulianova's chiesa di San Flaviano, initially built as a free-standing
octagon (1472-ca. 1530), rebuilt and given its dome after the Spanish sack
of 1596, and restored in 1926 and in 1948ff.  Herewith two illustrated,
Italian-language accounts of this church:
http://www.giulianovaweb.it/guida/21.htm
http://tinyurl.com/c4f84y
Other views:
http://www.darnick.com/scoala/date/italia/turnx.jpg
http://tinyurl.com/c2wkxa
http://www.lattanzivini.it/San%20Flaviano.jpg
F.'s aforementioned relics are kept here:
http://tinyurl.com/bjs693
http://tinyurl.com/aukksw

In addition to Giulianova, F. is the patron saint of another former
Acquaviva possession, the town of Conversano (BA) in southern Apulia, where
though his feast is kept on 24. November he is identified as F. of
Constantinople.  And just to make things even more confusing, at Recanati
(MC) in the Marche, which has purported relics of an F. and whose originally
medieval cathedral is so dedicated, that F. is celebrated on 22. December
(the feast day of the legendary martyr F. of Rome) but is identified as F.
of Constantinople:
http://tinyurl.com/27ugs8


3)  Benedict of Dolia (d. 1120?).  Peter the Deacon's early twelfth-century
(ca. 1136) catalogue of holy people associated with the abbey of
Montecassino, the _Ortus et vita iustorum cenobii Casinensis_, relates in
chapter 46 that Constantine, a king (we would say, judge) of the Sardinians,
asked abbot Oderisius (i.e. Oderisius I; 1087-1105) to select a bishop for
him from one of the brothers.  O. selected Benedict, a man venerable in all
things.  While in office B. was noted -- so Peter tells us -- for the
following miracles:
  a) A great crowd of sparrows was in the habit of defecating all over his
cathedral, not even exempting the altar vessels.  When B. adjured them in
the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit to depart and make a mess no
more, they did so -- and none has dared to return.
  b) Saracen raiders in Sardinia reached B.'s cathedral and asked for the
bishop.  B. was standing before the altar, offering prayers, but they could
not see him.  Everyone they found they led off into captivity.  But they did
not find B., who was right in front of them.

B. has been identified as the bishop of Dolia who in 1112 confirmed a
donation made by his predecessor Virgilius (still in office in 1089).
Though Dolia (accented on the first syllable) was incorporated into the
diocese of Cagliari (also accented on the first syllable -- but you knew
that!) early in the sixteenth century, its medieval cathedral of San
Pantaleo remains as a parish church in today's Dolianova (CA).  Said to have
been begun in the latter half of the twelfth century and to have been
consecrated in 1289, it was preceded by an early medieval church traces of
which have been found during restoration of the present structure.
Here's an illustrated, Italian-language account of this monument:
http://web.tiscali.it/itgnervi/pantaleo.htm
Expandable versions of the views in the previous account are here:
http://www.stilepisano.it/immagini4/index12.htm


4)  Constabilis (d. 1124).  This less well known saint of the Regno (in
Italian, Costabile) was a child oblate at the then Cluniac monastery of the
Most Holy Trinity at today's Cava dei Tirreni (SA).  Late in life he became
its fourth abbot.  C. is the founder (in 1123) and patron of today's
Castellabate (SA), a former possession of the abbey on the coast of his
native Cilento in what is now southernmost Campania.  He is the Cilento's
only saint.  His cult was confirmed in 1893.

C. was at the head of a major and very wealthy regional institution.
Whereas subsequent expansion and rebuilding has vastly altered the abbey's
appearance, in the parts closest to the mountain against one of whose flanks
it is built (Monte Finestre, a.k.a. Monte Pertuso) there are notable
medieval survivals.  Though perhaps slightly later, the east side of the
cloister may be from C.'s tenure as abbot:
Plan:
http://tinyurl.com/r3fbg
Views:
http://community.webshots.com/photo/87698289/1087699105036367367BEqzgg
http://community.webshots.com/photo/87698289/1087699228036367367DUGmCv
http://community.webshots.com/photo/87698289/1087699168036367367PWsYPj
http://community.webshots.com/photo/87698289/1087699330036367367jslREb

Best,
John Dillon
(last year's post lightly revised)

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